ABSTRACT

Social cognition is an area of social psychology that has been flourishing over the past two decades. It has harnessed basic concepts from cognitive psychology and developed and refined them to explain human thinking, feeling, and acting in a social context. Moreover, social cognition has integrated emotional influences and unconscious processes to reach a more complete understanding of social psychological phenomena.

In this volume, the reader will find a representative sample of outstanding research in the field of social cognition. The chapters address its central themes, roughly organized along the temporal axis of information processing. They include basic operations like perception, categorization, representation, and judgmental inferences. Other chapters focus on issues like social comparison, emotion, language and culture. All of the contributors are internationally-renowned experts who share with the reader their accounts of the research experience in each of their domains.

Social Cognition: The Basis of Human Interaction is an invaluable resource for researchers requiring a comprehensive, yet concise, overview of the field, and may also be used by intermediate and advanced students of social cognition.

chapter 4|22 pages

Conversational Inference

Social Cognition as Interactional Intelligence

chapter 5|28 pages

Induction

From Simple Categorization to Higher-Order Inference Problems

chapter 7|18 pages

Comparison

chapter 8|21 pages

Metacognition

chapter 9|19 pages

Intuition

chapter 10|19 pages

Spontaneous Evaluations

chapter 11|25 pages

Emotion

chapter 12|23 pages

A Social-Cognitive Perspective on Automatic Self-Regulation

The Relevance of Goals in the Information-Processing Sequence

chapter 13|21 pages

Language and Social Cognition